Ralph Moody was born in 1898 to Charles and Mary (Gould) Moody in New
Hampshire. He married Edna Hudgins in 1922 and they had two sons and a daughter.
After the period of ranching and cattle trading covered in Dry Divide and Horse
of a Different Color, he gave up ranching to work as an officer and district
manager of B/G Foods, Inc., a national restaurant chain, first in Missouri and
then in California. When he was 83, he returned to New England, and died there,
in the home of his sister Elizabeth, on June 28, 1982.

According to Moody himself, he had wanted to write a story as soon as he had
learned to read for himself. His mother had read aloud to their family, and he
became an avid reader himself. He learned to write from reading. When Moody w
as over 50 he enrolled in a night school writing course, supposedly to learn
how to help his daughter with a high school writing course she was taking.
When his first short story was returned, his teacher had written that he should
expand it into a book. He did, and that book became Little Britches.

When one reads the Little Britches series, it’s easy to wonder why Ralph didn’t
stay a rancher. We know he prospered at ranching and that he loved it. The reason
is that he wanted to marry Edna, his Medford sweetheart, and she refused to
marry a farmer. He went to Kansas City to see if he could learn to support a
family in town, and discovered he could. They married, and in the late 1940’s
they moved to northern California. He told an interviewer for the New York
Times Book Review, August 6, 1967, "My goal in writing is to leave a record
of the rural way of life in this country during the early part of the twentieth
century, and to point up the values of that era which I feel that we, as a people,
are letting slip away from us." (This information was gleaned from Something
About the Author, Vol. 1, p. 162)

We highly recommend the Little Britches series as a family read-aloud for
children in the third grade and above. Little Britches, the true story of
Ralph Moody’s boyhood on a Colorado ranch as an eight-year-old in 1906,
is full of family fun, solid values, and real cowboys. At the end of Little
Britches, Ralph’s father dies, and Man of the Family continues with Ralph’s
efforts to help support the large family. Actually, all of the children do
their part, and the way the family works together is an inspiration.
The surprise ending of this book (no, I won’t tell you) could stimulate
a good family discussion on the moral struggles Mrs. Moody faced. These
struggles led to the family’s move back to the Boston area, the period
covered in Mary Emma and Company. Home Ranch occurs between the chapters
of Man of the Family, and elaborates on the details of Ralph’s summer job
on a cattle ranch in the shadow of Pike’s Peak. It is shortly after he
returns home that the family moves east for a fresh start.

Boston is not a healthy environment for Ralph. He cannot adjust to being a
city boy, so he moves to his grandfather’s farm in Maine. There he
learns how to live with a man who can get along with no one. The Fields
of Home is one of the best books written that deals with what we call
today "the generation gap." It also deals with family loyalty. In spite
of major conflicts, Ralph and his grandpa learn to love and understand each other.

The last three books in the series cover Ralph’s young adult life, and they have
much to teach about how to form wise personal and business relationships. In
Shaking the Nickel Bush, poor health forces Ralph back west in the midst of the
Depression. Since getting a job as a cowhand was impossible, he made some fast but
dangerous money as a movie stunt rider in Arizona. Then he formed an unwise
friendship with another unemployed cowhand who was in love with an old car and
Ralph supported them all as a "cowboy artist." Dry Divide and Horse of a Different
Color show Ralph making his living with cattle and horses again, and we learn
with him how business partnerships can complicate one’s life.
Find available works by: Ralph Moody